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Paul Mahan

A Man Worth Following

Philippians 3:15-21
Paul Mahan June, 26 2019 Audio
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Paul's conversation was exemplary; so much so that he often said: 'follow me.' And he spoke of other men whom we should follow.
Can we, should we follow men?
What does the Bible say about being mature in faith?

The Bible encourages believers to grow in maturity, as seen in Philippians 3:15 where Paul calls for those who are mature to be thus minded.

The concept of maturity in faith is significant in Scripture, especially highlighted in Philippians 3:15, where Paul encourages believers to strive for perfection, meaning maturity. This maturity reflects a deep understanding of the Gospel and a commitment to living in accordance with it. In Ephesians 4, Paul explains that pastors and teachers are given to the church for the perfecting or maturing of the saints, so that they may attain the fullness of Christ. Maturity is thus a lifelong pursuit that should result in believers growing more Christlike in their conduct, understanding, and love for others.

Philippians 3:15, Ephesians 4:12-13

How do we know that following Christ is the one thing needful?

Following Christ is essential because He is the only source of true fulfillment and eternal life, as John 14:6 affirms.

The centrality of Christ in the believer's life is underscored in Philippians 3, where Paul emphasizes that knowing Christ surpasses all earthly gains. As believers, our pursuit must be singularly focused on Christ, who embodies the 'one thing needful.' This is affirmed by Christ Himself in John 14:6, where He states that He is 'the way, the truth, and the life.' Therefore, to follow Him is not only wise; it is imperative for spiritual growth and ultimate fulfillment. God reveals the necessity of this pursuit through His Word and our experiences, showing us the emptiness of worldly distractions.

Philippians 3:8, John 14:6

Why is it important to follow godly leaders?

Following godly leaders is crucial as they provide spiritual guidance and exhibit an example of faith for others to emulate.

The importance of following godly leaders is highlighted in Philippians 3:17, where Paul encourages believers to imitate him and others who walk in faith. Scriptural examples, such as Moses and Paul, reveal the necessity of godly leadership in guiding the church and ensuring that believers remain steadfast in the truth. God has established leaders to shepherd His people, and their lives become a model of faith and conduct. This is not about glorifying men but about following their faith as they follow Christ, as outlined in Hebrews 13:7, which encourages remembering and considering the outcome of their way of life for guidance in our spiritual journeys.

Philippians 3:17, Hebrews 13:7

What does it mean that our conversation is in heaven?

Having our conversation in heaven means that our conduct and priorities should reflect our identity as citizens of heaven, focused on Christ.

In Philippians 3:20, Paul states that our conversation (or citizenship) is in heaven, indicating that the believer's true home is with Christ. This means our conduct, thoughts, and priorities should be aligned with heavenly values, rather than earthly distractions. Believers are called to live with an eternal perspective, understanding that our ultimate hope and fulfillment come from Christ. This is in stark contrast to the distractions and temptations of the world, which are temporary. As we grow in our faith, our behavior must reflect our heavenly citizenship, affecting how we interact with the world around us and demonstrating our allegiance to Christ.

Philippians 3:20, Hebrews 11:13-16

Why are many considered enemies of the cross?

Many are considered enemies of the cross because they oppose the truth of the Gospel and seek to promote their glory rather than God’s.

In Philippians 3:18-19, Paul speaks of many who he weeps over as enemies of the cross of Christ. These individuals prioritize earthly desires and pleasures over the truth of God's Word. They often promote teachings that appeal to human nature, such as health and wealth, rather than the sacrificial love exemplified by Christ. This shift away from the cross, which represents self-denial and reliance on Christ's work for salvation, places these individuals in direct opposition to God's message. A true follower of Christ recognizes that our glory must not come from our works, but solely from the grace of God, emphasizing the profound implications of the cross for salvation.

Philippians 3:18-19

Sermon Transcript

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Philippians chapter 3, this is
where we left off, verse 15. He says, Let us, therefore, as
many as be perfect. The word perfect, as you have
heard so many times, means mature. Paul wrote in Ephesians 4 that
pastors and teachers and so forth were sent for the perfecting
of the saints, that we all might come under the measure of a perfect
man, the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, that
is, grow up in him in all things, grow up to be like him. And he
says, let us, as many as be perfect. Now, if we've been under the
gospel 10, 15, 20 years, 30 years, we ought to be. We ought to be mature, shouldn't
we? Paul said this in 1 Corinthians 13. He said this, and he turned
it into a little misquote. He said, when I was a child,
I spoke as a child, talked about things, and children, talking
about toys. And your understanding was, he
said, I understood as a child, didn't understand much. I was
always whining and crying and impatient and on and on it goes. He said, when I became a man,
mature, I put away childish things. That's really the subject here.
That's the tenor of this whole text here in Philippians 3. Our
conversation is in heaven, or should be. It is, but it's not
nearly as much as it should be. We are too taken up with the
things of this world, aren't we? And that's like a little
child with toys. Well, in our text, he says, Let
us, therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded. What's he been talking about?
Counting everything done, lost. Counting the knowledge of Christ,
everything. The one thing needful. Sevenfold
desire of a believer. We've got food and rain. We just
don't need anything else, do we? Do we? And our Lord called
covetousness idolatry, didn't He? And one of the last thing
Peter said in his epistle, flee, put away idolatry. This is a pressing matter. So
he says in verse 15, let us be thus minded, let us realize how
pressing this is, how needful this, how this is the one thing
needful. And so he goes on to say, if
anything, if anything, in any way, whatever it is that you
and I are taken with, or distracted by. It says, God shall reveal this
unto you. He shall. How does He do that?
How does God reveal things to us? How does He reveal His Word? That's right. He reveals to us
the one thing needful. And what He reveals to us is
vanity of vanity. Everything is vanity. The book
of Ecclesiastes is a story of life. how that the preacher,
Solomon, was given everything that this life can give. And he begins by saying, the
very first words are vanity of vanity, it does say the preacher,
vanity of vanity, all is vanity. And he tells us by experience,
through the word of God and his own experience, how that nothing
Satisfied. It's vain. Vain means it's empty.
It won't fulfill you. There's no fulfillment. It's
like things that go in, they go out. They're gone. They won't
stay with you. And he ends Ecclesiastes by concluding
the same thing. Vanity or vanity. So he says
God will reveal this unto you. He'll reveal it through His Word.
And He'll reveal it through painful experience. No matter what it
is or who it is, we're going to lose it. It's going to grow
old. The grass with all flesh is grass. The flower, oh, it's beautiful.
Remember when you were a little child, you were taken up with
dandelions and buttercups and all that, and you'd bring one
to your... There's no sooner pick it than to start wilting
and it's gone. No child may cry over something
like that, but all flesh is grass, and the grass withereth, and
the flower fadeth. The glory of man, everything,
everything that our affection is upon, we lose it, and then
the sorrow. So he says, God will reveal this
to his people. He reveals this to his people,
and it's a lifelong revelation. It's a lifelong revelation through
his word and through his spirit. All right, verse 16. He says,
nevertheless, what you have already attained, let us walk by the
same rule. Let us mind the same thing. Let
us walk by the same rule. All of God's people walk by faith,
not by sight. We don't walk Like the world,
the world sees things and says, that's what I'm going after.
The believer's eyesight is different. The things that are seen are
what? Temporal. We're looking for an unseen thing.
The unseen things are eternal. We've got our eye. Our eye, hopefully,
will be single. If the eye is single, the whole
body is full of life. And if your eye is upon the Lord
Jesus Christ, He's the one you're after, and you walk by faith.
Walking by faith means looking to, trusting in, believing, longing
for, communing with the Lord Jesus Christ by faith. Believing his word, believing
his promises, all that he said about himself, about the world,
and that we believe, and that's how we walk. We don't see things
like the world sees them. We don't listen to things that
the world is saying, and I don't listen to the world, but the
foolish, hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? The
wisdom that man comes up with year by year and generation by
generation, it hasn't changed. And it's whatever man comes up
with, it'll change. But God changes not. We listen
to Him whose Word and whose wisdom changes not. We don't listen
to the Word. We listen to God. We walk by
faith according to His Word. And He said, let us mind the
same thing. Let us mind the same thing. That
is, let us all have our minds and our hearts set on one thing. Thanks and love. Let's say it.
where Christ is. He's the pride, didn't he say?
Paul said, this is all I have on my mind and my heart, and
this is the one thing needful, and this is the prize that I'm
after. Christ. How about you? Verse
17, so Paul says, Brethren, leave followers together of me. Follow
me. Look at 1 Corinthians 4. Can
we follow men? Well, he just told us to, didn't
he? Someone might say, you're not supposed to follow men, you're
supposed to follow the Lord. Well, that's what the Corinthians... One person said, remember they
got in a preacher popularity contest, and one said, I'm a
Paul, I'm a Paulus, I'm a Seamus, and another said, well, I'm a
Christ, I don't follow any man. Well, look at 1 Corinthians 4.
You know, the Lord has raised up many men over the years, through
the years. Leaders of men and women. And
I'm so thankful. Aren't you? Moses. If you didn't
follow Moses, you're not going to the promised land. Right?
He's the man God raised up. And then Joshua. Followed him,
the young man. Probably some old people maybe
resented Joshua a little bit. Paul, when Paul left, Timothy
came. And Paul said, let no man despise
your youth. Preach with authority. And Abraham,
David. David was a sinful man, wasn't
he? A man of like passions like we were. I could have followed
that man. I would have loved to have followed
that man. I would have loved to have carried
his armor. It would have been an honor. First Corinthians four
verse fifteen says that you have ten thousand instructors in Christ
talking to those that heard the gospel from him. He said you
have not many fathers but in Christ Jesus I have forgotten
you through the gospel wherefore I beseech you be you followers
of me. This man had a heart for a true
affection for those whom God used him to bring the gospel
to them. They were like his children.
He didn't think of himself as being above them or greater than
them, as a father with all this wisdom and their little ignorant
children. That's not what he's saying. But it's the same way
as a father loves his child and is concerned for it. That's the
affection that Paul was saying. He said, I'm only doing what's
good for you. Read on. He says. Chapter 10. The first print ends. Chapter
10. Look at verse 31. You have it. Well, yeah, 31. He said, whatever
you do, eat or drink, whatever you do, do all of the glory of
God. Give no offense. Give no offense. Never not to
offend anyone, the Jews, Gentiles, the Church of God. I please all,
in all things. It's not, you know, you remember
we said if any man please men, he's not the servant of God,
that's Galatians 8. You know what he's saying. He
said, I'm not living for myself, I'm living for my brethren. I'm
not trying to, you know, what I'm doing, I'm doing for them.
So he says, I'm seeking, not my, not seeking my own prophet,
verse 33, but the prophet of many that they might be saying,
look at the next word. Brethren, be followers of me as I also am of Christ. See that? Go to Hebrews 13, Hebrews 13. I am so thankful that God gave
me a godly God sent man who preached the truth and never veered from
that truth one jot or one tittle. Who really had the people to
whom he preached had their soul's welfare in mind. The glory of
God, number one, and the welfare of the people in mind. And I
was one of them. And I'm so very thankful. And I followed him. Followed him. And endeavored
to still follow him. Teach, preach, and lead as he
did. He was my example. Look at Hebrews
13, this is what it says. Verse 7, remember them, meaning
in prayer, think about, don't forget, them which have the rule
over you, who have spoken unto you the word of God, whose faith
follow. considering the end, the goal,
the purpose of their conversation. Now, go back to our text. It's
not men we follow so much as the faith that they are preaching. You understand? And their example
in faith. So look at verse 17 of our text,
Philippians 3. Brethren, be followers together
of me, and mark them which walk As you have us, for an example. Mark them. There are others,
Paul said. As I mentioned Timothy, Titus,
and Paul. Oh, what a promoter Paul was
of all his brethren, wasn't he? All the brethren. He said one
time, I am less than the least of all the apostles. And he promoted
them, as do all men who love the truth and love the men God
has raised up. You know, my pastor had many,
many men preach from his pulpit, and there were a lot of bad messages
preached from that pulpit. And he was trying to encourage
these men, hoping that the Lord would teach them in listening
to other men who brought some good messages. There were some bad messages,
Prager, that he had to undo. But he was patient and compassionate
with and hopeful for men. And many, many men who preached
in the pulpit fell away, left the gospel. They did. That's why I say I'm so glad
that the man that I followed never did leave the gospel. And
he said, now many walk like us. You have us in example. But now,
verse 18, many walk of whom I have told you often. Paul often warned
the church, every church, often. He named names of people that
did damage to the cause of crime. Hymenaeus and Alexander, and
on and on it went. Alexander the coppersmith, on
and on. He said, I've often told you,
warned you. That's what a watchman does.
Because wolves are dressed in sheep's clothing, and sheep don't
always recognize them. And this is the job of the watchman. And that's what he does. And
that's what Paul did. He said, I've told you often. Often. But, now just look at
the attitude he had, and now tell you even weeping, that they're enemies of the cross
of Christ. What was Paul weeping over? Well, you know, David, throughout
the Psalms, if you've read the Psalms, you cannot help but notice
how the David said, Lord, deal with my enemies. Often he'd say,
slay my enemy, kill my enemy. In Psalm 139, he said that, David
said that. Do not I hate them that hate
thee. Yea, I hate them with a perfect
hatred, mature hatred. They're blasphemers against God. You cannot love someone who blasphemes
your God. You cannot love a false prophet
that butchers men's souls, that's stealing your God's glory, that's
bringing reproach upon your Lord. You can't love that person. Pray
for him. You can't love God and love those
that are bringing his name down to him. But Paul said, I say,
weeping. What he was weeping over was
not his enemies, but weeping over the great damage that they
did. Weeping over the reproach they bring on God. Weeping over
the souls that they're destroying. Weeping. Weeping. Weeping. And he said, many. Look at verse 18. Many, Walt. Did he say many? Did our Lord not say many? He
said many false prophets. Titus, go over to Titus chapter
1. Titus chapter 1, this is Paul's
letter to a young preacher. It follows 1 and 2 Timothy. Titus chapter 1, look at how
this, look at what Paul says here. He says Titus chapter 1
verse 4, to Titus, my own son, in other words, he heard the
gospel from Paul, after the common faith, grace, mercy and peace
from God to Paul. So I left you a creed that you
should set in order the things that are wanted. And down in
verse 10, verse 9, Verse 9 says, Hold fast the faithful
word, as you have been taught, that you may be able, by sound
doctrine, to exhort and to convince the game-sayers, that's arguing.
For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, especially
they of the circumcision, that is, within religion, whose mouths
must be stopped, who subvert whole houses, Teaching things
out not for filthy money of them all, one of themselves even said
it. The prophet, the Christians are always liars. Evil be slow
belly with this witness is true. Rebuke them sharply. Pretty strong language in it.
He said many unruly. Now that was 2000 years ago.
How many are there now? 1000 total. And Paul said, I tell you often
warm, rebuke, prove correct. That's what he told young Timothy.
Rebuke, rebuke with all authority. Let no man despise you. Many
walk, I tell you, weeping. They're enemies of the cross
of Christ. Verse 19. Their end is their destruction
if God is their belly. It's health and wealth gospel.
That's what that means. God is their belly. Covetous
men. whose glory is in their shame.
Look at verse 19. Their glory is in their shame. Their glory
in things that ought to be shamed of. And are ashamed of that which
they should glory in. That is the gospel of Christ,
the truth. Enemies of the cross of Christ.
Our Lord calls them workers of iniquity. Over in Matthew 7,
you know these verses. Matthew 7 where the Lord said,
Many will say unto me, Lord, Lord, And they said, in answer
to him, have we not? Let me turn and look at the quote
for you. They said, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? In thy name have cast out devils,
in thy name done many wonderful works, and he'll profess unto
them, I never knew you. Depart from me, ye that work
iniquity. But they were preaching in his
name. They were casting out devils. They were doing wonderful works
in his name. But did you catch what they said? Have we not? In other words, they were pleading
with him what they had done. And our Lord said, you're workers
of iniquity. You're taking, you're getting
glory in what you have done for me, as opposed to what I have
done for you. And Titus 3 verse 5, he says,
Not by works of righteousness which we have done. But according
to His mercy, He had saved. It's not what we have done. It's
what He had done. So, and Paul said, they glory
in their shame. They glory in what they did. Not what Christ has done. But
God, Paul said, God forbid that I should not save anyone. the cross of my Lord Jesus Christ,
what He had done. Because after we've done all
that's required of us, what are we? Unprofitable servant. That's what Paul said. I'm not
fit to be called a disciple. I'm doing what is my reason for
serving. I'm doing what I love to do, ought to do, should do.
But I get no glory in this. The necessities are laid upon
me, and woe is unto me if I don't preach the gospel. So he said
in verse 19, they mine earthly things. Earthly things. I told someone recently, whatever
appeals to the flesh, whatever men say that's appealing to our
flesh is wrong. It's not of God. It's not of
God. The gospel is an offense to the
flesh. All right, look at the last two
verses. Our conversation. Now, let's read without the parenthesis. Go back to verse 17, because
18 and 19 are in parenthesis. Let's read verse 17 and 20. Brethren,
be followers together of me. Mark them which walk, like us. That is, you have us for an example.
Verse 24, our conversation is in heaven. You remember when
John said, they are of the world, and therefore speak of the world. And that's what the world hears.
We have a family church. We have programs for our children.
That sounds good. But it sounds just like the world,
doesn't it? Social programs and all that.
This place is not a social program. This is a house of worship. It's
a spiritual house. When we look at spiritual things, Verse 20, our conversation, and
the word conversation takes in every part of us, our mind, our
thoughts, our walk, it's our conduct, our ways, it's our speech. It's in heaven. Like Hebrews
11. Hebrews 11 talked about all those
strangers and pilgrims in the earth. They said they had their
minds, their hearts, their affections set on one thing. And if they'd
been mindful of another thing, they'd have turned around and
gone back. Some of them did. Some of them did. They said,
we want to go back to Egypt. What was there, people? Leeks
and onions. You mean to tell me you'll sacrifice
the promised land and following God for leeks and onions? Yeah. What will a man give in exchange
for his soul? Anything. But God's people won't give anything.
They won't give anything. They count all things lost for
the excellency of the knowledge of Christ. This is our conversations
in heaven, that is, our conversation. Who is it we're talking about?
Talking to, walking with, who? Christ. We're called Christians. That is a Christian. Your mind,
your heart, your affection, your communion with, your desire is
set on a person. That's the Bible, right? Our
conversation in heaven from whence also we look for the Savior.
You know what God's people want? They want saving. They want save
from this untoward generation. They want save from this place
we live in, this bondage, this captivity. We want save from
ourselves. The world doesn't need a Savior.
They don't think they need a Savior. They don't want a Savior. They
don't want Him to come back. We're having fun here. But not God's
people. We're like we're in Egypt. Come
help or get us out. Come, Lord. Even come quickly.
Is that you? Look at verse 21. He's going
to change our Lord and Savior. Look at verse 20. For the Savior,
the Lord, Jesus Christ. who shall change our vile bodies. What's our problem? It's this
flesh. See what Paul was saying? The
world's all about flesh. We want done with it. The world
loves the flesh. We hate it. We want done with
this flesh. No, it's our problem. Lord, come
remove us from this vile flesh. And give us a glorious body,
a sinless body. Well, he will, according to the
working whereby he's able even to subdue all things unto himself.
I was going to have you turn to 1 Corinthians 15 and talk
about that new body, but time is out. But brethren, is that
you? Is it? I mean, it is or it isn't. Christ is all your desire is
not. And you want to be with Him or
you don't. I pray it is okay.
Paul Mahan
About Paul Mahan
Paul Mahan has been pastor of Central Baptist Church in Rocky Mount, Virginia since 1989; preaching the Gospel of God's Sovereign Grace.
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